Research news

In what could explain earlier findings that just a small number of genetic changes
control the widespread evolution of many species of sticklebacks, researchers report in the March 25, 2005, Science that mutations in a single gene appear to be responsible for the changes in the armor
of these widespread fish.

David Kingsley of Stanford Medical School and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and colleagues
found that reductions in the armor of threespine sticklebacks that have migrated from
marine water to freshwater is an example of parallel evolution derived from an allele
on a single gene, Eda.

"This finding shows that while the morphological change is large, the underlying
genetics are simple," Kingsley told The Scientist. Marine water fish carry the genetic change at such a low frequency that individual
animals do not carry homozygous alleles for the gene, a condition required for the
development of low-plated fish, he said. But when these marine fish move to a new
freshwater environment, the low-plated phenotype has a selected advantage, and the
low-plated fish can appear quickly through natural selection at a higher frequency
of the preexisting genetic change.

Eda encodes the signaling molecule ectodermal dysplasin, which controls the development
of hair and teeth in human embryos and the bony plate armor of sticklebacks. Sequencing and comparing the complete Eda region in marine and freshwater fish revealed that most low-plated populations in
the wild shared the same base pair changes.

Sequence amplification from 25 random nuclear genes failed to show evidence for one
single origin of low-plated sticklebacks. To confirm that different levels of Eda signaling could change plate development in these fish, the researchers injected
one-celled embryos from low-plate parents with a full-length mouse Eda A1 cDNA. When used in mice carrying a null mutation at the Eda locus, this construct has been shown to restore development of teeth and hair. Polymerase
chain reaction genotyping of the fish in this cross confirmed that they were all homozygous
for the low-plate Eda allele. Due to mosaic inheritance of the gene, some transgenic animals developed
extra plates, but none of the controls did.

"This is one of the first times to show the actual gene involved in a major evolutionary
change," said Catherine Peichel, of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, who was not involved in the study
but once worked in Kingsley's lab. It is a good example of selective polymorphism,
which is hidden in the marine population, she said: "As soon as the fish go into fresh
water, there is strong selection for the allele."

In addition to identifying the gene responsible for the change in stickleback plate
armor, this study makes another important point about parallel evolution. "Rather
than using hundreds of ways to solve a problem, evolution uses a particular mechanism
repeatedly to solve a problem," Kingsley said.

"It would be interesting to know how often this [kind of single gene activity] happens
in other plants and animals," said John Postlethwait, of the University of Oregon, who was not involved in the study. While Eda is a gene
of major effect, but natural selection usually occurs in situations of multiple genes
with smaller effects, so it would be interesting to look at this more common situation
in natural selection, he said.